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Editorial Reviews

The Dedelphi race is facing extinction, their planet All-Cradle under attack by a deadly biochemical weapon. Ceasing an interminable war, the Dedelphi are seeking aid from Earth's Bioverse Corporation, led by Dr. Lynn Nussbaumer. Praeis Shin t'Theria aids in the truce, but it may not be enough for her people to survive. Sarah Zettel weaves a complex tale in Playing God, and Tara Ochs plays a crucial role with her composed and enthralling performance. Ochs has an almost detached otherworldliness to her voice that conveys the multi-planetary dimensions, and uses a diverse array of accents in performing these well-drawn characters.

Publisher's Summary

To save an alien world, a human architect must risk destroying itFor two centuries, the planet of the Dedelphi has been riven by war. Though delicate, swanlike creatures, the planet’s natives are fierce in battle, and their ceaseless conflict has reduced their world to a wasteland. To save themselves and their world, the Dedelphi have forged a fragile peace and called for outside intervention. The Earth corporation Bioverse constructs a plan to heal the shattered planet. It’s the most ambitious engineering project the universe has ever seen, and if it backfires, the result will almost certainly be genocide. Hired to oversee the massive undertaking is architect Lynn Nussbaumer. Rebuilding the planet will take decades, and Nussbaumer’s first challenge is to arrange for a generation of Dedelphi to live out their lives in orbit around their home. When old conflicts and fresh violence emerge aboard the station and on the planet’s surface, she finds that it takes more than a talent for design to draft a blueprint for peace.